[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 24, Volume 4]
[Revised as of April 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 24CFR971.13]

[Page 551-554]
 
                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
CHAPTER IX--OFFICE OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR PUBLIC AND INDIAN HOUSING, 
               DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
PART 971--ASSESSMENT OF THE REASONABLE REVITALIZATION POTENTIAL OF CERTAIN PUBLIC HOUSING REQUIRED BY LAW--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 971.13  HUD enforcement authority.

    Section 202 provides HUD authority to ensure that certain distressed 
developments are properly identified and removed from PHA inventories. 
Specifically, HUD may:
    (a) Direct a PHA to cease additional spending in connection with a 
development which meets or is likely to meet the statutory criteria, 
except as necessary to ensure decent, safe and sanitary housing until an 
appropriate course of action is approved;
    (b) Identify developments which fall within the statutory criteria 
where a PHA has failed to do so properly;
    (c) Take appropriate actions to ensure the removal of developments 
from the inventory where the PHA has failed to adequately develop or 
implement a plan to do so; and
    (d) Authorize or direct the transfer of capital funds committed to 
or on behalf of the development (including comprehensive improvement 
assistance, comprehensive grant amounts attributable to the 
development's share of funds under the formula, and major reconstruction 
of obsolete projects funds) to tenant-based assistance or appropriate 
site revitalization for the agency.

 Appendix to Part 971--Methodology of Comparing Cost of Public Housing 
                  With Cost of Tenant-Based Assistance

                            I. Public Housing

    The costs used for public housing shall be those necessary to 
produce a revitalized development as described in the next paragraph. 
These costs, including estimated operating costs, modernization costs 
and costs to address accrual needs must be used to develop a per unit 
monthly cost of continuing the development as public housing. That per 
unit monthly cost of public housing must be compared to the per unit 
monthly Section 8 cost. The estimated cost of the continued operation 
and modernization as public housing shall be calculated as the sum of 
total operating, modernization, and accrual costs, expressed on a 
monthly per occupied unit basis. The costs shall be expressed in current 
dollar terms for the period for which the most recent Section 8 costs 
are available.

                           A. Operating Costs

    1. The proposed revitalization plan must indicate how unusually high 
current operating expenses (e.g, security, supportive services, 
maintenance, utilities) will be reduced as a result of post-
revitalization changes in occupancy, density and building configuration, 
income mix and management. The plan must make a realistic projection of 
overall operating costs per occupied unit in the revitalized 
development, by relating those operating costs to the expected occupancy 
rate, tenant composition, physical configuration and management 
structure of the revitalized development. The projected costs should 
also address the comparable costs of buildings or developments whose 
siting, configuration, and tenant mix is similar to that of the 
revitalized public housing development.
    2. The development's operating cost (including all overhead costs 
pro-rated to the development--including a Payment in Lieu of Taxes 
(PILOT) or some other comparable

[[Page 552]]

payment, and including utilities and utility allowances) shall be 
expressed as total operating costs per month, divided by the number of 
units occupied by households. For example, if a development will have 
1,000 units occupied by households and will have $300,000 monthly in 
non-utility costs (including pro-rated overhead costs and appropriate 
P.I.L.O.T.) and $100,000 monthly in utility costs paid by the authority 
and $50,000 monthly in utility allowances that are deducted from tenant 
rental payments to the authority because tenants paid some utility bills 
directly to the utility company, then the development's monthly 
operating cost per occupied unit is $450--the sum of $300 per unit in 
non-utility costs, $100 per unit in direct utility costs, and $50 per 
unit in utility allowance costs.
    3. In justifying the operating cost estimates as realistic, the plan 
should link the cost estimates to its assumptions about the level and 
rate of occupancy, the per-unit funding of modernization, any physical 
reconfiguration that will result from modernization, any planned changes 
in the surrounding neighborhood and security costs. The plan should also 
show whether developments or buildings in viable condition in similar 
neighborhoods have achieved the income mix and occupancy rate projected 
for the revitalized development. The plan should also show how the 
operating costs of the similar developments or buildings compare to the 
operating costs projected for the development.
    4. In addition to presenting evidence that the operating costs of 
the revitalized development are plausible, when the per-unit operating 
cost of the renovated development is more than ten percent lower than 
the current per-unit operating cost of the development, then the plan 
should detail how the revitalized development will achieve its reduction 
in costs. To determine the extent to which projected operating costs are 
lower than current operating costs, the current per-unit operating costs 
of the development will be estimated as follows:
    a. If the development has reliable operating costs and if the 
overall vacancy rate is less than twenty percent, then these costs will 
be divided by the sum of all occupied units and vacant units fully 
funded under PFS plus fifty percent of all units not fully funded under 
PFS. For instance, if the total monthly operating costs of the current 
development are $6.6 million and it has 1,000 occupied units and 200 
vacant units not fully funded under PFS (or a 17 percent overall vacancy 
rate), then the $6.6 million is divided by 1100--1000 plus 50 percent of 
200--to give a per unit figure of $600 per unit month. By this example, 
the current costs of $600 per occupied unit are at least ten percent 
higher than the projected costs per occupied unit of $450 for the 
revitalized development, and the reduction in costs would have to be 
detailed.
    b.If the development currently lacks reliable cost data or has a 
vacancy rate of twenty percent or higher, then its current per unit 
costs will be estimated as follows. First, the per unit cost of the 
entire authority will be computed, with total costs divided by the sum 
of all occupied units and vacant units fully funded under PFS plus fifty 
percent of all vacant units not fully funded under PFS. Second, this 
amount will be multiplied by the ratio of the bedroom adjustment factor 
of the development to the bedroom adjustment factor of the Housing 
Authority. The bedroom adjustment factor, which is based on national 
rent averages for units grouped by the number of bedrooms and which has 
been used by HUD to adjust for costs of units when the number of 
bedrooms vary, assigns to each unit the following factors:.70 for 0-
bedroom units, .85 for 1-bedroom units, 1.0 for 2-bedroom units, 1.25 
for 3-bedroom units, 1.40 for 4-bedroom units, 1.61 for 5-bedroom units, 
and 1.82 for 6 or more bedroom units. The bedroom adjustment factor is 
the unit-weighted average of the distribution. For instance, if the 
development with one thousand occupied units had in occupancy 500 two-
bedroom units and 500 three-bedroom units, then its bedroom adjustment 
factor would be 1.125--500 times 1.0 plus 500 times 1.25, the sum 
divided by 1,000. Where necessary, HUD field offices will arrange for 
assistance in the calculation of the bedroom adjustment factors of the 
Housing Authority and its affected developments.
    c. As an example of estimating development operating costs from PHA 
operating costs, suppose that the Housing Authority had a total monthly 
operating cost per unit of $500 and a bedroom adjustment factor of .90, 
and suppose that the development had a bedroom adjustment factor of 
1.125. Then, the development's estimated current monthly operating cost 
per occupied unit would be $625--or $500 times 1.25 (the ratio of 1.125 
to .90).

                            B. Modernization

    The cost of modernization is the initial revitalization cost to meet 
viability standards, that cost amortized over twenty years (which is 
equivalent to fifteen years at a three percent annual real capital cost 
for the initial outlay). Expressed in monthly terms, the modernization 
cost is divided by 180 (or 15 years times 12 months). Thus, if the 
initial modernization outlay to meet viability standards is $60 million 
for 1,000 units, then the per-unit outlay is $60,000 and the amortized 
modernization cost is $333 per unit per month (or $60,000 divided by 
180). However, when revitalization would be equivalent to new 
construction and the PHA thus is permitted to amortize the proposed cost 
over

[[Page 553]]

thirty years (which is equivalent to twenty-two and one-half years at a 
three percent annual real capital cost to the initial outlay), the 
modernization cost will be divided by 270, the product of 22.5 and 12, 
to give a cost per unit month of $222.

                               C. Accrual

    The monthly per occupied unit cost of accrual (i.e., replacement 
needs) will be estimated by using the latest published HUD unit total 
development cost limits for the area and applying them to the 
development's structure type and bedroom distribution after 
modernization, then subtracting from that figure half the per-unit cost 
of modernization, then multiplying that figure by .02 ( representing a 
fifty year replacement cycle), and dividing this product by 12 to get a 
monthly cost. For example, if the development will remain a walkup 
structure containing five hundred two-bedroom occupied and five hundred 
three-bedroom occupied units, if HUD's Total Development Cost limit for 
the area is $70,000 for two-bedroom walkup structures and $92,000 for 
three-bedroom walkup structures, and if the per unit cost of 
modernization is $60,000, then the estimated monthly cost of accrual per 
occupied unit is $85. This is the result of multiplying the value of 
$51,000--the cost guideline value of $81,000 minus half the 
modernization value of $60,000--by .02 and then dividing by 12.

                             D. Overall Cost

    The overall current cost for continuing the development as public 
housing is the sum of its monthly post-revitalization operating cost 
estimates, its monthly modernization cost per occupied unit, and its 
estimated monthly accrual cost per occupied unit. For example, if the 
operating cost per occupied unit month is $450 and the amortized 
modernization cost is $333 and the accrual cost is $85, the overall 
monthly cost per occupied unit is $868.

                       II. Tenant-Based Assistance

    The estimated cost of providing tenant-based assistance under 
Section 8 for all households in occupancy shall be calculated as the 
unit-weighted averaging of the monthly Fair Market Rents for units of 
the applicable bedroom size; plus the administrative fee applicable to 
newly funded Section 8 rental assistance during the year used for 
calculating public housing operating costs (e.g., the administrative fee 
for units funded from 10/1/95 through 9/30/96 is based on column C of 
the January 24, 1995 Federal Register, at 60 FR 4764, and the 
administrative fee for units funded from 10/1/96 through 9/30/97 is 
based on column B of the March 12, 1997 Federal Register, at 62 FR 
11526); plus the amortized cost of demolishing the occupied public 
housing units, where the cost per unit is not to exceed ten percent of 
the TDC prior to amortization. For example, if the development has five 
hundred occupied two-bedroom units and five hundred occupied three-
bedroom units and if the Fair Market Rent in the area is $600 for two 
bedroom units and is $800 for three bedroom units and if the 
administrative fee comes to $46 per unit, and if the cost of demolishing 
1000 occupied units is $5 million, then the per unit monthly cost of 
tenant based assistance is $774 ($700 for the unit-weighted average of 
Fair Market Rents, or 500 times $600 plus 500 times $800 with the sum 
divided by 1,000; plus $46 for the administrative fee; plus $28 for the 
amortized cost of demolition and tenant relocation (including any 
necessary counseling), or $5000 per unit divided by 180 in this 
example). This Section 8 cost would then be compared to the cost of 
revitalized public housing development--in the example of this section, 
the revitalized public housing cost of $868 monthly per occupied unit 
would exceed the Section 8 cost of $774 monthly per occupied unit by 12 
percent. The PHA would have to prepare a conversion plan for the 
property.

      III. Detailing the Section-8 Cost Comparison: A Summary Table

    The Section 8 cost comparison methods are summarized, using the 
example provided in this section III.
    A. Key Data, Development: The revitalized development has 1000 
occupied units. All of the units are in walkup buildings. The 1000 
occupied units will consist of 500 two-bedroom units and 500 three-
bedroom units. The total current operating costs attributable to the 
development are $300,000 per month in non-utility costs, $100,000 in 
utility costs paid by the PHA, and $50,000 in utility allowance expenses 
for utilities paid directly by the tenants to the utility company. Also, 
the modernization cost for revitalization is $60,000,000, or $60,000 per 
occupied unit. This will provide standards for viability but not 
standards for new construction. The cost of demolition and relocation of 
the 1000 occupied units is $5 million, or $5000 per unit, based on 
recent experience.
    B. Key Data, Area: The unit total development cost limit is $70,000 
for two-bedroom walkups and $92,000 for three-bedroom walkups. The two-
bedroom Fair Market Rent is $600 and the three-bedroom Fair Market Rent 
is $800. The applicable monthly administrative fee amount, in column B 
of the March 12, 1997 Federal Register Notice, at 62 FR 11526, is $46.
    C. Preliminary Computation of the Per-Unit Average Total Development 
Cost of the Development: This results from applying the location's unit 
total development cost by structure type and number of bedrooms to the 
occupied units of the development. In this example, five hundred units 
are valued

[[Page 554]]

at $70,000 and five hundred units are valued at $92,000 and the unit-
weighted average is $81,000.
    D. Current Per Unit Monthly Occupied Costs of Public Housing:
    1. Operating Cost--$450 (total monthly costs divided by occupied 
units: in this example, the sum of $300,000 and $100,000 and $50,000--
divided by 1,000 units).
    2. Amortized Modernization Cost--$333 ($60,000 per unit divided by 
180 for standards less than those of new construction).
    3. Estimated Accrual Cost--$85 (the per-unit average total 
development cost minus half of the modernization cost per unit, times 
.02 divided by 12 months: in this example, $51,000 times .02 and then 
divided by 12).
    4. Total per unit public housing costs--$868.
    E. Current per unit monthly occupied costs of section 8:
    1. Unit-weighted Fair Market Rents--$700 (the unit-weighted average 
of the Fair Market Rents of occupied bedrooms: in this example, 500 
times $600 plus 500 times $800, divided by 1000).
    2. Administrative Fee--$46.
    3. Amortized Demolition and Relocation Cost--$28 ($5000 per unit 
divided by 180).
    4. Total per unit section 8 costs--$774.
    F. Result: In this example, because revitalized public housing costs 
exceed current Section 8 costs, a conversion plan for the property would 
be required.